Predicting the Collapse of Turbulence in Stably Stratified Boundary Layers

part ii dynamics stability Physics and Astronomy(all) 01 natural sciences fluxes cases-99 land temperature-fluctuation method oscillations Chemical Engineering(all) surface Physical and Theoretical Chemistry intermittent turbulence 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI: 10.1007/s10494-007-9094-2 Publication Date: 2007-07-27T14:44:15Z
ABSTRACT
The collapse of turbulence in a plane channel flow is studied, as a simple analogy of stably stratified atmospheric flow. Turbulence is parameterized by first-order closure and the surface heat flux is prescribed, together with the wind speed and temperature at the model top. To study the collapse phenomenon both numerical simulations and linear stability analysis are used. The stability analysis is nonclassical in a sense that the stability of a parameterized set of equations of a turbulent flow is analyzed instead of a particular laminar flow solution. The analytical theory predicts a collapse of turbulence when a certain critical value of the stability parameter d/L (typically O(0.5–1)) is exceeded, with d the depth of the channel and L the Obukhov length. The exact critical value depends on channel roughness to depth ratio z0/d. The analytical predictions are validated by the numerical simulations, and good agreement is found. As such, for the flow configuration considered, the present framework provides both a tool and a physical explanation for the collapse phenomenon.
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